Modern Banks: Financial Reporting Strategy and Regulations

Course Number:

45902

Program

MBA

Concentrations

Accounting

Course Description

The main goal of the course is to provide students with an in-depth understanding of how financial reports provide unusually accurate and detailed (but not perfect) information about the risks and performance of financial institutions, mostly banks and bank like financial institutions (thrifts, mortgage banks, and commercial banks). Their financial statements increasingly are based on fair value accounting and their financial reports include increasingly extensive risk and estimation sensitivity disclosures, such as interest rate risk disclosures, loan loss disclosures, fair value accounting for financial instruments, accounting for securities-lending/repo/securitization, derivatives and hedge accounting, and market risk disclosures. The course covers these disclosures and also conclude with an fundamental-based valuation designed for banks.

Both fair value accounting and risk and estimation sensitivity disclosures are necessary ingredients for financial reports to convey financial institutions’ risk and performance in today’s world of complex, structured, value and risk partitioning financial instruments and transactions. While financial institutions often report imperfect (or worse) fair value measurements and risk and estimation sensitivity disclosures, careful joint analysis of the information they do provide invariably yields important clues about their risks and performance. While this course is most relevant to students interested in financial institutions, much of the accounting material also pertains to varying extent to other types of firms. For example, many non-financial firms securitize their accounts receivable or hedge their commodity, interest rate, or foreign exchange risk using derivatives. (4/12 -PL)